dhoward26
Structural
- Jun 2, 2011
- 160
I'm having a debate with another structural friend over connections of wood trusses to concrete walls. I learned one way and he learned another and I'm not sure at this point which is the "correct" way. I attached a detail of the connection.
For out-of-plane wind and seismic forces when connecting a wood truss to a concrete wall, is it acceptable use Simpson A-35's (or something similar) or do you have to have direct connection to the anchor bolts in the top of the wall with a steel angle of some sort? I'm aware of the code requirements about not placing wood in cross-grain bending, etc. The way I was taught through my EIT years and first couple of PE years was to use Simpson A35's, but I'm questioning the validity of this now after doing more research.
For out-of-plane wind and seismic forces when connecting a wood truss to a concrete wall, is it acceptable use Simpson A-35's (or something similar) or do you have to have direct connection to the anchor bolts in the top of the wall with a steel angle of some sort? I'm aware of the code requirements about not placing wood in cross-grain bending, etc. The way I was taught through my EIT years and first couple of PE years was to use Simpson A35's, but I'm questioning the validity of this now after doing more research.